The Columbus Dispatch

6 charged in alleged scheme to help get Adams elected in NYC

- Jake Offenhartz and Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK – Six people were charged Friday in an alleged scheme to divert tens of thousands of dollars in public money to New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ campaign months before his election.

The indictment, announced by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, does not implicate Adams or other current city employees in the upended plot.

Rather, it describes a straw donor conspiracy orchestrat­ed by people with business before the city who hoped to maximize their donations in exchange for political favors.

Among the defendants are a former NYPD commander who has known the mayor for decades and the owners of a constructi­on safety business that’s currently working on a trash depot on Staten Island.

“We allege a deliberate scheme to game the system in a blatant attempt to gain power,” Bragg said in a statement. “The New York City Campaign Finance Board program is meant to support our democracy and amplify the voices of New York City voters. When the integrity of that program is corrupted, all New Yorkers suffer.”

Prosecutor­s said the effort to illegally structure donations was led by Dwayne Montgomery, a former NYPD inspector currently listed as director of integrity for the Teamsters Local 237, which represents municipal workers.

Montgomery is accused of recruiting friends and relatives to take advantage of the city’s generous matching funds system, which provides an eight-toone match for the first $250 donated by a city resident.

He allegedly orchestrat­ed more than two dozens straw donations between 2020 and 2021, while also helping to organize fundraiser­s for Adams. It’s not clear how much money was ultimately steered to the campaign.

Evan Thies, a spokespers­on for mayor’s campaign, acknowledg­ed that Adams knew Montgomery “socially,” noting the two served in the NYPD and later worked on criminal justice issues. However, he denied that the campaign had any knowledge of the scheme.

The indictment also names Shamsuddin Riza, Millicent Redick, and Ronald Peek as helping to organize the illegal donations. Yahya Mushtaq and Shahid Mushtaq, the leaders of Ecosafety Consultant­s, a constructi­on company with active city contracts, are named as well.

Although New York’s campaign finance rules bar those with business before the city from donating more than $400, prosecutor­s say the defendants devised a scheme to donate to the campaign under the names of Ecosafety’s employees, without their knowledge.

“You could use a straw man,” Riza allegedly told Yahya Mushtaq during a phone call. “Whoever’s on the LLC or the incorporat­ion, those are the people that do business with the city. Anybody else is an employee, the employees don’t fall under that criteria.”

Riza, who owns a constructi­on company and was previously charged with falsifying business records, also allegedly indicated that he was hoping to secure work from the city.

“FYI! This is the one I want, Safety, Drywall, and Security one project but we all can eat,” Riza wrote in a July 2021 email to Montgomery in which he sent along the informatio­n for a constructi­on project called Vital Brooklyn, prosecutor­s allege.

A City Hall spokespers­on said Adams never discussed city business with any of the defendants, though he said it was likely the mayor and Montgomery had spoken about other matters in passing.

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